10 (Stunning, Crazy or at Least Interesting) Brides from 10 Different Decades, 1870-1960

July 8, 2014

The white wedding dress trend has been around an awfully long time — since Queen Victoria started it in 1840, in fact — but it’s pretty impressive to watch it shape-shift over the years.

Below I have wedding dresses for every decade covering 100 years. Some of them are representative of their time; some of them aren’t; some are flat-out crazy. (The 1960s, I’m looking at you.) Whenever possible I got the name of the dressmaker, bride and photographer.

1940s

1930s

Here’s the former King of England, and the woman he abdicated the throne for, Wallis Simpson. (More on them here.) Her dress is actually blue and matches her eyes. An unusually simple dress for this day, it supposedly became one of the most copied dresses of all time. Mainbocher wedding dress, via New York Social Diary.

1910s

This is Lily Elsie, a famous actress of her day, and her wedding dress is trimmed in ermine, my friends. Lucile Ltd. (Lucy Duff Gordon), photo by Foulsham & Banfield.

1900s

Notice that every bit of this bride is covered but her face. Hands, neck, everything. But doesn’t she look elegant? I think the straight dress with the voluptuous train is a pretty striking combo. Miss E. Root (the caption I was relying on is very mysterious — I would love to know more about her), photo by Harris & Ewing, the official White House photographers of that time.

1890s

Here’s another fully covered bride. I suspect that’s a crown of orange blossoms in her hair, a once-popular wedding adornment that Queen Victoria also wore. Photo by R. Alex Wells.

1880s

1870s

The dark dress and white veil may not be as unusual as you think. I’ve seen a few of these from the late 1800s floating around. Queen Victoria started the white wedding dress trend in 1840, and it continued to gain popularity in the 1800s until it became the norm. I wonder where this dress falls in that spectrum, if a dark dress was unusual or not by this time. I’m guessing many brides couldn’t afford to buy a one-time-only dress, but they made a nod to the trends with a one-time-only white veil. Also, how much does this guy look like Willem Dafoe? Photo by C. N. Nielsen.

It was very common for a woman in the mid-late 1800s to wear her best dress along with a veil and especially orange blossoms. A single use dress was way too expensive for most. THe chemicals used to create images on cdvs (which is what this last image is) also rendered colors in ways different from modern black and whites – red, maroon, yellow and dark blue appeared black while light blue appeared white.